I was not attracted to this episode as for the previous ones, but the dialogue in bed with the fried chicken is a gem. The tonal shift when Claire confesses she's guilty is perfectly executed at the perfect time. I'm really in awe with this show.
I was not attracted to this episode as for the previous ones, but the dialogue in bed with the fried chicken is a gem. The tonal shift when Claire confesses she's guilty is perfectly executed at the perfect time. I'm really in awe with this show.
It's interesting how at a certain moment we lose track of Philip (the last time we see it is outside the Hapstall mansion before the whole mayhem appears). I am sure this will have an important role in the second half of the season.
definitely
This open relationship thing clearly wont work. Josh is just not suited for it. It remains to be seen whether it will break the relationship or if at the end Arnold will choose monogamy with Josh.
But who know, after all this show always defies expectations!
I think that was not the main complaint of the review, but that it was messily built and that most storylines didn't really have enough stakes to become interested in them, a bit of an empty exercise, which I tend to agree.
The episode deserved a bit more but not much, a B- let's say. It was a qute weak episode with a lot of backs and forths (the whole plea story) and quite messy. Except for the final revelation of Philip's parents and the gun, it just spinned wth little substance.
I suppose that in that moment Oliver was still pretty shaken and not really knowing how crazy was that guy that just broke in his apartment, so I think he can be justified for not closing the fridge.
by far
Conner actually made it abundantly clear few episodes ago, so the fake kidnapping was not really useful from that point of view.
Being the unattractive one is how Oliver feels, he has low self-esteem, as they said in the previous episode.
IS there really anyone who's -that- interested in Girls to make it the "most popular show of the time"?!?
I mean, it created quite a buzz in the first season, but then?
I suppose it will be… I mean, they -can't- stay this level of happy for the rest of the season, can they? and the first chance of tension (Arnold's coming out) has already been done.
I think Josh is the very adverse-to-risk kind of guy (why look for complications if everything works well?) and also longing for his…
lovely episode, perhaps a bit disjointed but it's fitting for a drug-themed one.
I'm sorry, but the absolutely most terrifying thing ever seen in a "children" movie is the transformation of the queen into a hag in Snow White.
plenty of things to love in this premiere, but I was particularly impressed by the sex scene. It starts as a classic sex scene in a comedy, with the mandatory awkward moments the genre requires, but it becomes progressively a "real" sex scene, and when Arnold goes on top of Josh the comedy is completely gone. Quite…
In the first season I found the lead a bit too shrill and annoying, even if the show was very crafty and well made, but the second season was just spectacular, "The ghost is seen" is one of the best episodes of tv ever.
I've never hoped for a show to have great ratings and survive for another season more than this one… crossing fingers!
Considering how much I was indifferent (on the verge of irritated most of the time) I was during the show's first season, I'm surprised to discover I'm waiting eagerly for thursday to watch Murder. It definitely delivers this season!
for me the worst part of this season is that it sort of doubles the worst part of the previous season: the chimeras like the assassins that answer the call of the benefactor. The season with the alpha pack had also tastes of a series of small enemies, but they were way more definted than these chimeras.
Theo-the-villain does not fit very much how they built this season 5A, with the chimeras. Also, as an enemy in itself, Theo is definitely not memorable nor remotely dangerous, he makes sense only in connection with the dread doctors.